GETTING PERSONAL: Div Tax Cut Is No Bone For Retirement
08 Jan 15:48
By Kaja Whitehouse A Dow Jones Newswires Column NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Plans to make dividends tax-free to individual investors will not help investors where they need it most, and in fact, it may hurt them.
That's because a good chunk of individual investor assets are locked away in tax-sheltered retirement plans, like the 401(k) and the IRA. These plans are already exempt from paying taxes on dividends, so making them tax-free changes nothing.
In fact, the plan could hurt American's nest eggs if the price of dividend paying stocks rise due to the new tax-free aspect, because then investors would be paying a premium for a benefit that they don't receive.
The same holds true for pension funds, which tend to avoid tax-free investments because, as tax-exempt organizations, they don't get the benefit.
"It's like tax-exempt bonds; it would be malpractice for a pension fund manager to invest in municipals (bonds)," said Martin Sullivan, an economist at Tax Analysts in Arlington, VA.
Under the current system, a person with an IRA, for example, can expect to pay income taxes on dividend income, or the distribution of a company's earnings to shareholders, when he or she withdraws funds from the account. If dividends were made tax-free, nothing would change for the typical IRA owner, except perhaps the price of dividend paying stocks, which might inflate on the benefit of their tax-free income.
Opponents of this thinking say that dividend yielding stocks cannot be compared to municipal bonds because the dividend portion of the stock is miniscule. "The dividend payout ratio is so small, I don't see it being a major factor," said Karl L. Polen, member of the board of directors of the Arizona State Retirement System in Phoenix.
A rise in stock prices will benefit investors, not hurt them, said John Scarborough, a principal at Bingham, Osborn & Scarborough, a San Francisco retirement planning firm. "I think retirement savings will benefit if this proposal goes through, because it will mean a boost for stocks." But the reason to avoid dividend yielding stocks in tax-sheltered plans goes back to a basic investing principal that says people should take advantage of any tax-sheltered status with more heavily taxed instruments, and keep lower tax investments in taxable accounts, said Alan Auerbach, professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley.
For some, this has meant even stocks are an unwise choice for tax-sheltered vehicles because they are otherwise taxed at the lower capital gains rate.
People have continued to invest stocks in tax-sheltered retirement plans on the argument that they have greater growth potential than many high tax investments like taxable bonds, said Auerbach.
But dividend paying stocks tend to grow at a slower pace than stocks that reinvest the money into the company. If these stocks were maintained in a taxable account, the investor could theoretically avoid all taxes if there were no dramatic rise in the stock price. But in a tax-deferred 401(k), for example, he would still shell out income taxes.
Bush's plan "pushes (the debate) more in the direction of taking equities out of 401(k)s, IRAs and other tax-sheltered vehicles," said Auerbach.
That would be a dramatic shift from current investing habits. In 2001, individual investors put 64% of their stock and hybrid mutual fund assets into tax-deferred accounts, according to data from the Investment Company Institute, a membership association for the mutual fund industry in Washington, DC. When you add in bond funds, the number drops to one-third of mutual fund assets in tax-deferred instruments, said ICI.
Approval of the Bush tax cut could dramatically change the profile of the typical dividend stock investor, said Sullivan, the economist at Tax Analyst.
The clientele of investors who will buy them now should behigher tax-bracket individuals instead of tax-exempt pension plans and investors who invest primarily in retirement plans, he said.
Younger people still might find it worthwhile to put some dividend yielding stocks in their retirement accounts because they have more time to see the stock prices rise, making the tax bite more worthwhile, said Jacob Friedman, chair of tax department at law firm Proskauer Rose. But older people, who are perceived as being in greater need of punching up their retirement savings, will want to avoid these instruments, he said.
"You put that money into a 401(k)," he said, "and it converts it, presto, a tax-free dividend into a taxable dividend." -By Kaja Whitehouse, Dow Jones Newswires, 201-938-2243, kaja.whitehouse@dowjones.com (END) Dow Jones Newswires 01-08-03 1548ET |